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Reading: US newspaper voices fears over Karachi atomic plants
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PhotoNews Pakistan > Tech > US newspaper voices fears over Karachi atomic plants
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US newspaper voices fears over Karachi atomic plants

Web Desk
By Web Desk Published March 6, 2015 5 Min Read
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Aerial Perspective of the Mausoleum of Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Karachi. Photo: South Asia Investor
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A leading American newspaper, ‘The Washington Post’ reported what they claim is a  ‘real nightmare’ that  could  (potentially) be unfolding in Karachi, as Pakistan will be supplied with two large nuclear reactors from China to aid the country in its energy crisis.

There has always been fear among world leaders that terrorists may try to steal one of Pakistan’s nuclear bombs and detonate it in a foreign country, however, some have said that the real nightmare could be unfolding in Karachi after the reactors are supplied.

The new power plants which comprise a new design are not yet in use anywhere in the world and will be each supplying 1,100 megawatts to Pakistan’s national energy grid. The reactors are being built next to a much smaller 1970s-era reactor located on a popular beach where fishermen still make wooden boats by hand.

The new ACP-1000 reactors will stand less than 20 miles from Karachi’s densely populated metropolis of 20 million residents. Many have come forward in argument against the government’s nuclear ambitions, questioning whether this was the best place to build the nuclear reactor.

“You are talking about a city one-third the population of the United Kingdom,” said Abdul Sattar Pirzada, a Karachi lawyer who is seeking to get the project halted. “If there would be an accident, this would cripple Karachi, and if you cripple Karachi, you cripple Pakistan,” he added.

Recommendations put forward by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission pertaining to nuclear power plant construction state that any new reactor should be situated away from a very densely populated area, preferably with fewer than 500 people per square mile within a 20 mile radius.

The same zone where the power plants would be constructed holds about 6,450 people per square mile a Pakistani nuclear physicist wrote in Newsweek Pakistan last year.

Concerns have also been expressed by some US diplomatic officials about China’s role in providing nuclear energy to Pakistan.

Pakistan still remains to be one of the few developing nations which is still pursuing civilian nuclear energy options since the Fukushima disaster in Japan in 2011.

With three operative nuclear power plants, Pakistan has turned to China for help in expanding the capacity of these plants. Efforts are underway to double the size of the Chashma Nuclear Power Plant in Punjab, as well as to build the new Karachi reactors.

“The risks are there. You cannot discount them, but you prepare for them,” said Khawaja Asif, Pakistan’s water, power and defense minister. “We are a nuclear power, so don’t underestimate us”.

The minister did not seem concerned that the world’s greatest nuclear disaster at Chernobyl occurred when the USSR was the world’s greatest nuclear power.

The ACP-1000 reactor was developed by China and cost about $5 billion each to build. The design of the reactor is based on one that France built in China in the 1980s.

Despite Pakistan’s refusal to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and the international ban on the transfer of nuclear technology to Pakistan, the China National Nuclear Corporation will still be supplying the ACP-1000 reactor to Pakistan.

“China’s expanding civilian nuclear cooperation with Pakistan raises concerns and we urge China to be transparent regarding this cooperation,” the US Embassy said in a statement on Thursday.

Of particular concern with supplying Pakistan with the reactors is the threat of terrorism with Karachi’s long history of security lapses. If a major attack or accident were to occur at a nuclear power plant, activists said there would be unimaginable chaos.

Meanwhile the people around the reactor who would be the most affected remain blissfully  oblivious to the dangers of this plant.

“The rangers and the police have very high security and are verifying all antecedents of job hopefuls. The Chinese are very generous and its an excellent employment opportunity for the people of the area. The Chinese take good care of us and we hope to get a chance to work for them” says area resident Rajesh Kumar Solanki wistfully.

Also read:US expresses full confidence in the safety and security of Pakistan’s Nuclear assets
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